The Bolshevik forces, although much larger, were scattered, without a unified leadership. In Zarasai front, the Bolshevik forces were led by the Lithuanian-born communist
Feliksas Baltušis-Žemaitis. The scattered Bolshevik forces were unable to exploit the fortifications left over from World War I, which were built between the Zarasai lakes. The Red Army men, forcibly mobilized by the Bolsheviks, had no motivation and often refused to march forward against the Lithuanians. The Bolshevik front leadership could only rely on communist units, but they were a minority. In preparation for further fighting, the Bolsheviks conducted an intensive propaganda campaign, issued appeals calling for an uprising against their commanders, claiming that they were the children of landowners, etc. According to the participant in the battles, Colonel , there were so many propaganda leaflets that you could fill entire carts with them. The propaganda campaign was not successful among the soldiers in both the Panevėžys and Ukmergė Groups, although many of the volunteers were barefoot, ragged, poorly fed, and poorly armed. The Commander-in-Chief of the Lithuanian Army, General
Silvestras Žukauskas, in his telegraph No. 101 of August 22, 1919, ordered an attack on the entire front from August 23 and the capture of
Daugavpils.
August 25–31 The first operation was launched by the Ukmergė Group. The following was achieved: • On August 25,
Zarasai was liberated, • on August 26 – , • on August 27 –
Turmantas railway station, • on August 28 – Graudinė, Šarlotė and other estates, the villages of Kaupiškės and Raguliškės, • on August 29 – Šventmuižė and Kriviškės estates,
Alūksta (
Daugava reached), • on August 30 –
Kalkuonė estate and railway station, approached
Daugavpils, established itself on the Daugava. • On August 31, Lithuanian units were driven out of the Kalkuonė railway station by three Polish infantry battalions. On September 1, Soviet Russian units attacked Lithuanian and Polish military units; Lithuanian military units counterattacked and reached Daugavpils. Soviet Russian military units retreated to the city, from where they were driven out by Polish and Latvian forces after the
Battle of Daugavpils on January 3–5, 1920. On August 30, the
Prime Minister of Lithuania,
Mykolas Sleževičius, officially congratulated the Lithuanian army for expelling the Bolsheviks from Lithuanian territory. == Aftermath ==